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Zoological Society 



duced to lay a figure and some observations upon it before the 

 Society. 



1 . It is the general belief of the inhabitants of Lake Erie that the 

 bite of the Proteus of the Lakes is poisonous. 



Dr. Holbrook observes that by the fishermen these animals are re- 

 garded **as poisonous, and are consequently seldom taken in hand." 



The Hon. Miss AmeHa Murray in her ' Letters ' mentions this 

 animal as caught in a net at Detroit, under the name of Fish Lizard 

 (vol. i. p. 1 72), and observes : " The fishermen said its bite was very 

 poisonous, and it had the yellowish-brown lurid look which seems 

 to appertain to venomous reptiles ; but Dr. Kirtland says it is per- 

 fectly harmless." 



And this latter opinion appears to be the almost unanimous im- 

 pression of the naturalists of America. 



Yet the examination of the teeth will almost justify the popular 

 belief, and at least render it very desirable that the animal should 

 be examined in its living state, and that its bite be submitted to care- 

 ful experiment. 



The upper jaw of the skull is furnished with two series of small, 

 acute, uniform, nearly transparent, conical, slightly curved teeth, the 

 outer series being placed on the narrow intermaxillary bone, the 

 inner series on the front edge of the vomer and on the outer edge 

 of the lateral processes of the pterygoid bone. The lower jaw has 

 a single series of similar teeth, which lock between the two series 

 above described. 



All these teeth have a conical cavity on the hinder part of their 

 base, with a short linear slit on the middle of the inner side, and an 

 oblong perforation above the slit in the middle of the inner side of 

 the tooth. The form of these teeth is exactly similar to the fang of 

 poisonous Serpents ; that is to say, the cavity is not a hollow in the 

 substance of the tooth itself, but is formed by the sides of the teeth 

 being produced and folded together, leaving a conical cavity in the 

 inner side of the base, as is easily proved by the examination of the 

 teeth, which shows that the cavity is lined with enamel ; and the 



junction of the two lateral expansions is rarely complete, but marked 

 by a more or less distinct or continued slit between the basal notch 



